I am looking for input from all different kinds of camps (small, medium, large, singles, and theme) regarding trash disposal and take away. I camp with a group of friends (ranging in size from 20 to 30 people). The last few years have had me thinking about changing our garbage set up. We have had a communal trash and recycling set-up with the understanding that people would take a bag when they left, and perhaps they have, but what seems to happen is that the last few people in camp end up with all the "left overs." And some of us have limited space to pack out the glass bottles from the bar and other big bags of garbage.

I was so mad Sunday morning with the condition of kitchen and the amount of trash that I took pictures of all the items left by people that vacated after the man burn, and created a "hall of shame" picture slide show to demonstrate what camp members left behind. I think people got my message at our after party. I proposed that we end the communal trash and recycling bags and make a policy that is basically - if you brought it, you take it home. Period. Some people said this could worsen the situation as people would leave trash on tables and in the community areas. I disagree, of course, as I keep a trash bag in my van and I fill it with my own trash and whatever moop I happen to pick up on my ventures. I bring a 5 gallon bucket with a tight lid for compost and this has definitely lowered the amount of wet trash, and I will continue to do this as a contribution to the kitchen and overall camp cleanliness.

Perhaps we could leave a bag for just aluminum cans (go to recycle camp) and paper goods that can be burned, but I fear other trash would just end up mixed in. I really do not want to become the trash enforcer but perhaps that is the only way to avoid being majorly pissed off on Sunday or Monday.

So how does your camp deal with trash? How do you ensure that some members are not left with huge bags and the end of the bar? Do you have a moop committee that sweeps camp daily? Do you have an enforcer that polices the trash and what people take when they leave? A sign up sheet for taking a number of trash bags in lieu of other camp duties? Communal trash? To each their own? Please share what works and what doesn't.

first of all I opened this message because I want to stifle my tendancy to talk trashHowever now that I understand what we are discussing I hope to learn from you, as I think it is clear that there are some really stupid people around who consider nothing but their own moment. They trash constantly with complete disregard. Perhaps being at BRC will shed a light on their behavior.

Either everyone grows up, steps up, and responsibly handles trash collection as a group, or they deal with their own trash. And if they can't deal with their own trash (or other people's trash they find) then there are plenty of camps with red or yellow on the moop map they could join.

The harder problem is hiding your trash receptacle from John Q. Burner. We had a lot of people come up and make a beeline for the trash can before getting verbally tackled and sent on their way.

We MOOP and stay in top of trash all through the week. Those leaving early take a bag or three with them (depends on size of vehicle and available space). We rented a truck for the camp this year, and the lion's share ended up riding put with the truck (it wasn't a surprise). I'm happy with how campmates pitched in and shared the workload and responsibility.

We took the trash to the Save Mart on Keystone Ave. in Reno, which had an EXCELLENT setup and friendly staff when we came through on Tuesday afternoon. We'll definitely come back to them again next year, and will probably do a much better job of separating trash by category so we can help with recycling efforts when we get to Reno.

Forgot to add, this year we stepped up our plans with MOOP sticks (trash grabbers) and a magnetic rake, both of which helped us raise the bar quite a bit. We build stuff, so the mag rake helped us make sure no screws or other hardware got left behind. The MOOP sticks just made it much easier to go after little bits.

Our camp clearly stated that in addition to dues, and other requirements, all camp members were expected to participate in daily MOOP patrols and to take at least 1 bag of camp trash home with them (in addition to their own trash). I find it works best to engage those departing directly; "how many bags can you take, 2 or 3?", and not accepting a weak reply. A reminder of that camp membership agreement usually convinces malingerers. People with sedans get plastic bottles crushed flat (no smell, etc). Years ago our MOOP Czar wrote member's names on each bag (having determined how many bags they could take, and not taking zero for an answer). RV's can always fit a few bags.

I double bag any that go inside my camper....(triple if there is obvious fluid, etc)

I wasnt to say, moonrise really stepped up to the plate this year and basically filled his trailer with trash left by others this year- prolly 20 bags and it cannot have been fun for him unloading it all when he got home on his own.

at dread pirate barbie, MDF puts 3 hessian sacks by our monkey hut, one for burnables, one for aluminium cans and one for whats left. as hessian can be burnt it makes for easy disposable of the burnables.

barbie Death camp/village as whole was pretty good, with mooping daily visable from our space in the village and a group sweep a few times at the end of the week. with a few failures on peoples parts pack it out covered by the rest of us.

FREE THE SHERPASBurners with torches is right and natural and just.-fishy.CATCH AND RELEASE.

I do not use oils on the playa and all wet trash is dried in net bags.. Remove all packaging and place in reusable containers. Compostabel wet wipes are found at Wal MArt in camping.. Under the Coleman brand. Strain food pure off water through a towel, Dry the towel in the wind. Wash in machine at home..

unjonharley wrote:I do not use oils on the playa and all wet trash is dried in net bags.. Remove all packaging and place in reusable containers. Compostabel wet wipes are found at Wal MArt in camping.. Under the Coleman brand. Strain food pure off water through a towel, Dry the towel in the wind. Wash in machine at home..

I tried drying wet trash my first year. It worked better than not doing it at all, but the 5 gallon compost bucket with a tight lid seems to have resolved the need to worry about a drippy meshy mess. While on playa the compost lid doesn't have to be super tight and the foodstuffs seems to dry right in the bucket just fine. The big part is that it keep the trash bags from filling up with coffe grinds. I worry the bags will rip and holy crow what a mess that would be. People who bring paper plates usually put those in a burn bag, because I don't want them in the compost bucket (it would fill too quickly).

I think it was Bob that said the best trash bags are the ones that go in a compactor. They are super strong. I am going to pick up a box of those soon to pack away for next year.

(((AntiM))) thanks, you & YourLarry were real lifesavers that last day.

Danibel, I dump my coffee grounds in my burlap burn bag. It's made from an old coffee bean sack so I figure it can handle it. The grounds dry real quick in that airy sack and burn just fine.

I use a LOT of paper towels, gosh, a spritz of vinegar water and a swipe with a paper towel will clean most any dish I've got with no grey water at all. Paper towels burn real quick, especially if they are greasy.

Moon if we had found that stash of bacon grease Monday night instead of Tuesday morning we might have burned that, too.